z r m hi i ii i i li ii I I "t mi "I 1 ' Cambria JTmrnam EBEXSBURG, PA. Satcbday Morning, : Nov. 4, 1871. On next Tuesday elections will be held for Governor, State officers and Legislas turo in Marjland, New Jersey, Massa chusetts, Wisconsin and Minnesota ; in New York for State officers and Legisla ture ; in Virginia, Mississippi and Nebras ka for members of the Legislature only, and in Illinois tbr a Congressman at large- Suggestions. Hon. F. Jordon, Sec retary of the State, in a communication as to the changes needed in tho Constitution of Pennsylvania, suggests the following : 1. An increase of tb nnmber of Senator and Representatives in the General Assembly. 3. Biennial ecsiions of tbe Legislature- 3. The election by the people of aundry State officers now otherwise chosen. 4. Minority representation 5. Modification of the Dardonlne rower. K A chance In the tenure and mode of sViirair. V thft 1llrii;i ArV. '' 7. A change in the date of onr annual fall election to the time or tbe rresiaentiai, to pre nt what ta rallixl cnlnnization from surround ing States, and to dispense with one election very lourtn year. Hon. George Conhelt., who was re elected a member of the State Senate from the Fourth (Philadelphia) District at the October election, died in that city on the 26th of last month. This will make a tie vote in the Senate, 16 Demo crats to 16 Radicals even conceding that Weakley, from the Cumberland Dis trict, cets his seat. As Mr. Connell was not a Senator, and had not yet taken the oath of office, but was only a Senator elect, it is plain and net controverted that the Speaker of the Senate, Mr . Broadhead, cannot issue a writ for a new election to supply the vacancy until after the meeting of that body on the first Tuesday of next January, How the Senate will be organ ized, or whether it will fail to organize at all until after the special election in the vacant district, remains to be seen. There is Radical precedent for the latter view of the case. William is. otokes, a ltadical ex Congressman from Tennessee, two years ago the defeated ltadical candidate for Governor of that State, and now supervi sor of internal revenue for the same, was arrested on his arrival at Washington last week for swindling tho treasury through certain bounty claims. The amount sto Jen by him is estimated to b from sixty to one hundred thousand dollars. Stokes bat- been a ranting, howling loyalist, in voking with his foul toogue political pains and penalties on all Southern Democrats, and always ready in the intensity of his patriotism to walk three miles out of his way to kick a dead rebel. If even hand ed justice is meted out to this arrant hypo crite and thief, the Penitentiary will soon claim him as its own. Hut as bis Con gressional colleague in infamy, Koderic R. Butler, not long since escaped convic tion for a similar crime, so will Stokes be able to brush away the cobwebs of the law and embark in another career of fraud and plunder. Georgs O. Evans was brought before Judge Pearson, of Ilarrisburg, on yester day week, or a writ of habeas corpus The cause of his commitment to the coun ty prison was argued at length by the counsel on both sides. On Monday last Judge Pearson delivered his opinion dis charging Evans from imprisonment on tbe charge of embezzlement. Tho ground taken by the Judge was, that Evans, not being a "State officer" as contemplated by the Act of Assembly, had not committed an embezzlement within the meaning of the statute. We are bound to acquiesce in this decision since Judge Pearson has declared that such is the law. The very first business of the next Legislature should be the passage of a law to change it and make it so plain that no man can misconstrue it. In the civil proceedins against Evans, the Judge fixed the amount of bail at 100,000, in default of which he was remanded to prison. Will his partners in the plunder release him ? A few days will decide. Dbfalcations, embezzlements, and thieving generally, are the order of the day, and tread close on each other's heels. The Radical Treasurer of Philadelphia MarcerJ loaned C. T. Yerkes, a broker or stock gambler, nearly half a million of dollars belonging to the city, for the use of which Marcer of course was to receive a handsome interest Last week Yerkee suddenly and disastrously failed, and the city loses tbe amount, unless Marcer's bail are able to pay it, which, as other defalcations have proven, is not at all probable. Robert W, Mackey, the pres ent State Treasurer, was also a friend of Yerkes, and kindly gave him $100,000 of tbe people's money to gamble with. It is said that Mackey repaid the amount into the State Treasury, If ho has, it would about exhaust his profits of tho of fice for the current year. Will the next Legislature look into this little affair and ascertain whether op not Mackey has made the treasury whole t This is the first lime, we believe, that Mackey has had bis fingers burned. He deserves no sympathy and none will be felt for him. lion. William A. Wallace, After a man has unsuccessfully exerted all hia powers and resources in attempting to accomplish a difficult task which has been imposed upon him, it is a poor and shabby return for his self-sacrificing labors to lay the cause of failure at his own door. As soon as tbe result of the late elec tion was"ascertained, vague hints, equiva lent indeed to a direct charge, were made by three or four Democratic papers pub lished in tho eastern part of tho State, that our defeat was attributable in a great measure to the inefficiency and misman agement of Wm. A. Wallace, Chairman of the State Executive Committee. This charge is as unjust as it is untrue. Mr, Wallace has heretofore acted in tbe same capacity, and his untiring zeal and active industry in managing political campaigns have been recognized by the Democracy of tho State and willingly conceded by Lis political opponents. Too much is expect ed from the Chairman of a State Commit tee, and tbe idea prevails to a great extent that he must and can achieve success, if he will. Ilia principal duty is one of or ganization, but in order to make that effi cient and decisive at tbe bailot-box, he must have the active co-operation of tho leading men of his party in every election district of the State. He is neither all powerful, nor is he ubiquitous. He can ncithor change a man's views nor compel him to deposit his vote. He may urge him by strong and powerful reasons to do so, but the act rests with the voter himself. One may call spirits from the vasty deep, but will they come ? Wherein and in what respect did Wm. A, Wallace fail to perform his whole duty in the late campaign ? It seemed to us that he was constantly at work, and that all his efforts were properly directed After a political contest is over there is always to be found a class of unhappy men, chronic grumblers and fault-finders, who claim that they can see where mis takes were committed, and that they coul have done the work very differently an with quite other results. If they were to attempt it, they would perhaps find them selves undecoived. If the editor of one of the papers to which we have referred was asked to cx plain why tho Democratic vote in his own county was twenty-one hundred les$ than it was at the election for Governor two years ago, he would perhaps charge it to Mr Wallace, when the fact is that his own paper is wholly responsible for it, owing to the disorganizing course it pursued both before and after tho meeting of tho State Convention. We render simple justice to Mr. Wal lace when we express our conviction that in the late canvass as Chairman of the Democratic State Executive Committee he was active, vigilant and energetic, and that he did all that could reasonably be expected from him. The Democracy of tho State, although defeated, aro neither so ungenorous nor so ungrateful as to sanction these gratuitous and undeserved assaults upon him. It must be a source of deep humiliation toevery intolligent'Republican to read the dull and insipid addresses delivered by Grant whenever he is honored with a public reception during his constant pere grinations throughout the country. It is not to be expected, of course, that every President should be as scholarly as Jeffer son nor as eloquent as John Quincy Ad ams, but it is expected that he will be able to say something appropriate to the occasion. But Grant is not equal to this trifling requirement, and whenever he at tempts a speech at one of these receptions he becomes tbe subject of laughter and commiseration by his own political friends. During his late trip to Maine he made the following reply to an address of welcome delivered by tha Mayor of Bangor : Ladies and Gistlkmen: I congratulate you and the people of the Stale of Maine and the people of the nation at large upon the occasion which has brought all of us here. It ia a mat ter in which you are particularly interested: ana the nation at large, I believe, ia almost equally interested with you. I hope that the railroad may prove to you and to us all that is expected of it, improving and building up a friendly feeling between us and the people of the same language with ourselves, who, I think, are equally interested in tbe preservation of tbe most cordial friendship. This is very touching and as clear as mud. Nothing but itself could be its own parallel. One would suppose that a high er reach of bold and impassioned elo quence could not be attained by the same man. This is a mistake. Grant far eclipsed it at Portland, where, having been introduced by the Mayor of that city, he made the following thrilling and bril liant speech : I have a vivid recollection of visiting your city six years ago. This is the second time I have been in your city, and am much pleased with the reception here aa well as at other placet I have visited in your State. If I do not oftener than I have heretofore, I shall not make many more visits here before I shall be quite an old man. It was a saying of the ancients, that the statue of Hercules could be judged from the size of his foot. From the two foregoing specimens of oratory we can form a correct estimate of Grant's menial calibre and his shining qualities as a speech maker. The census gives tbe total number of Iribh in this country at Si. 857.779 : nf Germans, 1,690,533. Chief Justice M'Kean, of Utah, is waging a vigorous ana unsparing war against the corner-stone ot polygamy. Thomas Hawkins, an Englishman and a prominent Mormon, has been convicted in the coort over which he (M'Kean) presides of the crime of adultery. The informa tion on the case was made by bis first wife, aB is required by the law of the Territory punishing tbat offence. A true bill has also been found by tbe Grand Jury against Brigham Young, for lewdly and lasciviously cohabiting with sixteen different women. His trial has not yet taken place, but will be brought to an issue at an early day. It is difficult to say where all this will end, if followed up by other prosecutions of leadiug mem bers of the Mormon church. The follow ing are the remarks of the Chief Justice when he passed sentence on Hawkins on last Saturday in Salt Lake : Thomas Hawkins, I am sorry for you, very sorry. You may not thiuk so now, but I hall trv to make vou think so. by the mercy which I shall show. You came from Englaud to this countrv with the wife of vour vouth. For manv vears vou were a kind husband, a kind father. At length, however, the evil spirit of Dolvcamv tempted vou and possessed you Then happiness departed from your household, and now, by the complaint of your faithful wife and the verdict of a law-abiding jury , you stand at this bar a convicted criminal. I might imprison you twenty years and fine you one thousand dollars. 1 cannot imprison you le a than five years nor fine yon less than three hundred dollars. It is right tbat you should be fined, anions other reasons, to help detray enforcing the laws, but my experience has been such that were I to fine you only, I am satisfied the fine would be paid out of other funds than vours and thus you would pro free, absolutely free from all punishment; and then these men who mialed you and many others, would believe that God had sent the money to pay the fine; that God had prevented the Court Irom sending you to prison, and that by a miracle you had been rescued from the authorities of the United States. I must look to it that my judgment gives no aid and comfort to such men. I must look to it that my judgment be not so severe as to seem vindictive and not so light aa to seem to trifle with justice. This community ought to begin to learn that God does not inter pose to rescue criminals from the consequences of their crimes, but, on tbe contrary, tbat lie so'orders the affairs of 11 is universe that, sooner or later, crime stands face to face with justice; and, just as the Master, I will tay here and now tbat whenever your good tehavior and the public good shall justify roe in doing so, 1 will gladly recommend that you bo pardoned. The judgment of the Court is that you be fined $500, and that you be imprisoned at hard labor for tbe term of three years. Contrary to all expectation, there was little or no excitement in the Court room The attendance was large, but generally all maintained a proper decorum. The United States Marshals and their deputies were fully prepared for any emergency. Notice of appeal to the Supreme Court was given by the prisoner 3 counsel, Death op a Distinguished Man. Despatches from Lancaster, Ohio, an nounce the death, in that place, on Thurs day of last week, of the Hon. Thomas Ewing, in the eighty second year of his age. Mr. L-wing in his lifetime occupied several positions of trust and importance in tho service of tbe State and country, and, in the prime of his years, was re garded as a man of far more than usual power and ability. He was a native of Virginia and emigrated, at an early age, with his parents to the then wilds of Ohio, where he grew up with the State and in his manhood assumed a position of com manding and wide-spread influence. He was elected to the United States Senate and served in that body from 1830 to 1837. He was Secretary of the Treasu ry, under President Harrison, Secretary of the Interior under President Taylor, an appointee to the United States Senate, in 1850, to fill a vacancy, and a member of the Peace Convention of 1801. After the discharge of his duties, in the latter, he retired from public life and lived in a quiet and unobstrusivo manner up until the time of his deatb. Mr. Ewing was one of the links in the chain of great men that connects tho. past with the present, and tbe severance, although not unlooked for, is one that will be seriously felt not only in his adopted State, but throughout the country. His funeral took place from St. Mary's Catholic church, Lancaster, Ohio, on Sat urday. - The friends took final leave of the distinguished dead at his residence, where the remains lay in a superb burial casket, on the plato of which was engraved "Tho mas Ewing, born December 28, 1789, died October 2G, 1871." The features wore a calm and dignified expression. Tub Area of the Chicago Fire. Careful measurements and calculations of the area of the burnt district of the city place its length, from its starling point to its place ending, at four and a half miles, and ita average width a little over one mile. Along tbe south side lake Bhore, however, and westward five blocks, Harri son street, tbe southern limit of the confla gration, and the distance from that street to Fullerton avenue, its northern limit, is only three and a half miles. The point of the fires beginning on the west side was about one mile south of Harrison street, south-westerly. The number of acres laid waste is not far from 3,300. A pretty careful com putation places number of buildings of all kinds destroyed at 18,000, of which at least 1,500 were substantial business structures. The actual total of the pecuniary losses is estimated at three huudred million dol lars, but no fair estimate that we have yet seen or heard of places the grand total be low .two hundred million dollars. We still believe the latter will cover all the losses, Chicago Journal Kf.uef. The Treasurer of the Chica go Iielief Committee reports tho following aa tho receipts for tbe relief of the Chica go poor. Cash received, $509,276: to tal amount for which drafts have been drawn and to be forwarded for collection, &c, $396,708 ; aggregate receipts, Sl, 486,986. Of this sum 34,490 has been distributed, tho balance remaining on band. The committee estimate tbat they will re quire $1,975,000 for the next thirty days, A Singular Murder. Tbe London papers record a singular murder committed by axlergyman, Kev. John Shelby Watson, a man of sufficient literary note to have been mentioned in a book entitled "Men ot the limes," and also in the Dictionary of Dr. Allibone, of this city, which contains a list of impor tant works, original and translated, by this unhappy man. His victim was his own wife, slain by him in a moment of passion or phrensy. The strange feature of the crime is that it was perpetrated on Sunday, October 8tb, and tho murderer continued to go about bis business as usu al till Wednesday. On that day, in re morse or insanity, be swallowed a dose of poison, having first despatched this note to a friend : I havo killed my wife in a fit of rage, to which she provoked me. Often has she pro voked me before, but I never lost restraint over myself with her till the preteut occasion, when I allowed fury to carry me away. Uer body will be found in the room adjoiuing, the key of which 1 leave with this paper. I trust she will be buried with the attention due to a lady ol birth. She is an Irishwoman. Her name is Annie. The friend, a physician, hurried to the spot, found Mr. Watson speechless and suffering from tho effect of poi3on. In "the little room of the library" the scene is thus described : There a horrible spectacle confronted them. Huddled up in a corner of the room, her knees toucbins her chest, her bauds convulsively clenched, and her head fallen to htr chest, was the body of ihe unhappy lady, her clothes sat urated with blood, which still seemed to ooze from the body in a dark, almost parple, pool. On examining her, Ur. Kugg louiu ner neau smashed m, and in places beaten almost to a iellv. There was, in addition to numerous other iroundi. a fracture on the occiput sufii cient. probably, to cause death ; both her tem ples were beaten in, and there was a deep wound in the middle of the forehead. The reporter of the London Evening Standard adds : It is impossible to speculate at present upon the motives of the crime. Mr. Watson himself says in his letter that he did it in a fit of fury, and those who were acquainted with the de ceased ladv concur in saying that she was soured in temper. On the other hand, the servant girl, who has lived with them three years, says that she was never a witneas to any quarrel between them. It is quite evident that quarrel must have suddenly arisen, in which, probably, some observation was made by the : . ... i 11. ti . lady wnicn goaaea jut. n auuu on to uiuuuess. At present, no weapon has been discovered which can be clearly traced as the instrument by which the murder was committed; but small hammer was found in the room, and it is possible it may have been used, but, if so, it hat been so effectually cleansed that it bears no mark3 of the use, neither do the hre irons The police, however, have taken pot-session of them, and they will be submitted to a much closer examination than the cursory one thev have undergone. A small bottle, containing a very diluted mixture, in which there were clear traces of prussic acid, was found on a chair by the bedside by l;r. Rugg, and it also has been banded over to the police. Either the courage of Mr. Watson must have failed him, or he must have thought that he had taken enough, for a full half of the mixture was found in the bottle. In every aspect it is a horrible and pe culiar case. It is shocking to think of a man of high attainments, mature age, and clerical character hurried to such a crime by a sudden burst of passion ; while on the other hand bow subtle must have been the insanity that escaped all observation till this outbreak. We have too the ein. gular self-command exhibited by a man who had committed such an act, and with the terrible secret on his mind, yet for three days preserving an unconcerned de meanor. In another letter or paper of directions, the unhappy man spoke of re lations in Ibis country : I kaow not whose business it will be to look to property left, as my little possessions will be my books and furniture. My only brother was living, when I last heard of him, five or six years ago, in America, at G'2 Grand street, Williamburg, and a neice wish bioi. He is my heir if be is still alive. I know not if I have any other surviving relatives. One quarter's wages will soon be due to my servant, and I should wish the sum to be more than doubled for her-on account of tho trouble which she will have at the present tirus, ai.d tbe patience with which she has borne other troubles. In my purse will be found 5 10. I leave a number of letters, many of them very old, with which I hope that those who handle them will deal tenderly. The books are a very useful collection for a literary man. Among the works of Mr. Watson, all of which aro enumerated in Allibono's Dictionary, are lives of George Fox, Richard Parson, Sir William Wallace, John Wilkes, William Cobbetr, and a great number of translations, many of which wore published in Hohn's Classical Library. It appears from the account of the hearing in the cases, that he had en tirely recovered from the effect of the poU son, and would of course be committed for trial. It may afford a solemn warn ing to all choleric husbands, and also, to all scolding wifes. Phila. Age. A Remarkable Phenomenon. A re markable geographical phenomenon has lately been presented in the district of Tel chef, in Lutbuania, Near the little town of Wromin, on the road from Telchef to Koyno, was a lake eight versts in length and five in breadth, noted for its abun dance of fish, the fishery of which was worth 1,500 roubles a year. A few weeks since, during a perfect calm, tho waters of this lake rose and were agitated as if by a violent tempest, while a strong sulphurous smell rising from them per vaded the locality. After two or three days this ebullition ceased, and the sur face of the lake was covered with dead fish, some of which were so large as to weigh two hundred pounds each. Fear ing their decomposition would breed pes tilence, tho inhabitants of the neighboring villages were called upon to collect them, and they were buried, with a goodly cov ering of lime. Since then the lake began to sink, while the sulphurous odor in creased daily, and the lake at the latest accounts had become nearly dry. It is supposed that the limestone and chalk bottom of the lake has given way, and tbe waters have 6unk into a subteranean canal. Andrew Stever, a farmer, liring six miles northeast of Delpbos, Ohio, was confronted in his own house, on Saturday night, by a robber, who, after asking for matches, presented a revolver. Stever knocked the pistol up and stabbed tho thief to death with a pocket-knife. A cornnrr'n jury exonerated Stever. A Ucuiarkablc History. Mow nn Inventor HtrnsslcU anil Won. In tho Scientific American we find a story of the struggles and triumphs oi an inventor which is worth preservatiuu. The substance of it is as follows : Tn lRf,8 Mr. Thomas Sheehan. of Dun kirk. New York, foreman in the blacksmith department of the Erio railway shops at that place, patented asuDmarico grappic, wun-u, though an inaenious Invention, proved to be one for which there was little demand. This was his first invention : and the cost ot ns completion, together with ooe year's strug- - 1 , i : I , . .,-V - gle to rnanuuciure ana introduce it, -uui-pletely exhausted Mr. Sheehan's means, and reduced bim to the exlrcmesi poverty, i was. in fact, in pretty nearly tha-same con dition as Palissy, the Potter, at the moment of his greatest distress. A wife and eight children in Sheehan's family were reduced to the verge of destitution, and Mrs. bheenan became uncommonly Litter. Just at Itliis crisis, Mr. S. D. Col well. General Freight Agent of the Erie railroad, at Dunkirk, chanced to meet Mr. Sheehan in the streets of that town and accosted him, with Well, Thomts, how are the grapples? 1 hear they have nsed you up." Yes," was the answer, "the grapples have done my business ; I wish I had never seen them." Throw 'em away," advised Mr. Col well, 'Have yon any now finished i "I have one almost done," said Thomas. Finish that; I will pay you 40 for it, and have it used for picking up coal at the dock. The money will help you In your present emergency, and jou can go back to your old place in the shop anu earn a goou living tor your lamily." "I will." Raid Thomas. Back to his humble home went the Inven tor, with new hope in his breast, and set himself to finish the grapple with all due speed. But, upon what slender threads do the fortunes of men depend ! A tap, the only one our inventor had of the sizo required suddenly snapped asunder, and, as It was essential to the progress of the work, he must have a now one or he ccnld not go od In his straight, he applied to his wife to lend him tweDty five cents to buy the nec essary steel to forge the tap. But she hav ing no faith in the grapple, refused, for two very eoed reasons first, that ebe believed the money would be thrown away if she gave it to her husband ; and second, that she had not tbe money to give him, even if so dis posed. The refusal was seasoned with some very hot spice that made it very unpalata ble to Thomas. Bnt he bethought him of a merchant who, in brighter 7ays had seen the color of his money, and who, perhaps, would now give him credit for the email modicum cf steel he required for the tap. To this merchant to prefer h"i3 request, he began beatiDg about the buh ; and fiually straying into politics, hot words passed be tween them, and our friend, feeling his man liness would suffer too keenly by asking credit for the steel, came away without it. With no definite purpoee he went home, ponderiDg npon how he should surmount this, now no trifling, obstacle of the broken tap. lie found his wife making lye for soft soap, but her acidity in no way neutralized by the alkaline reaction. Despondent and discour aged, he sat down, in no very enviable mood, when he chanced to spy a piece of iron lay ing near the tubs at which his spouse was working. Meditating upon how he couIJ make that piece of iron hard enough for a tap, led him to a rather rude experiment, the results of which have in the end made him a richer man than he evf r dreamed cf being. It so happened that from a distant rela tive, a Roman Catholic priest in Ireland, our friend had inherited quite a library of works ou chemistry: some of them rare and valua ble. IIo hail read some of these books to very good purpose. "There is surely carbon in tbat lye." thought he. "If I only could gtt that into this iron in the proper propor tion, I should have steel, and from that my tap, and so finish my grapple." VYith little hope or faith that he should succeed, he took soma of the lye, and addirjg, without any particular reason for eo doing, some saltpetre and common Fait, made a paste with this solution and a hard grudged e-iucerful of the little remaining flour there was in the house. He then forged the tap, and enveloping it in the paste, put the whole into a luted iron box and exposed it to heat for two hours in a blacksmith's fire. To hia j'"y and surprise when he took it out, it was hard enough to cut cast steel. The grapple was finished, and forty dollars flowed into ihe family treasury of Thomas Sheehan. He entback to his old work, disgusted with pateuts, and resolved never to havo anything to do with one again. But the remembrance of the tap, hardened in sc unique a manner, still haunted him. Having a great deal of case hardening ij do, he thought one day he would repeat the vspeiiment upon a large scale, which he did with perfect success. For twelve months he went on to experi ment, purchasing the materials with his own money, and worked in secret by night and at odd hours. At the end of twelve months he reconsidered his sentence of condemnation on patents, and applied for one on his pro cess, which was grauted September 4. 1S60, the claim being for a combination of dam aped flour, potash lye, or lye from hardwood ashes, nitre, common salt, and sulphate of zinc, for caso hardening iron. Ia 18d7 he patented an improvement "on the above named process. In 186S he took out another patent ou an entirely new process, which consists in the use cf raw limestone, char coal, black oxide of manganese, sal soda, common salt, and pulverized rosin, com bined, for converting iron into steel, which is now widely used, and from which he has reaped quite a fortune. No less than twenty-three of the leading railways in America now use this process, under license from tho patentee, for harden ing the links, guides, pi'ns, and nuts of loco motives, effecting, we are told, no less a sa ving than from five to six hundred dollars annually on each locomotive, in obviatin" the lost motion consequent upon the wear cf links, guides and pios. The inventor has already received for li censes under his patent of 1868 $29,650, and has just sold the remainder of his patont io America for $45,000. A Feeling Retort. A Boston paper having remarked that "puth Carolina now feels the first turn of the Executive thumb screw," tbe Savannah Aars replies: "Fold your arms, gentlemen of New Eng land Democrats of the North, fold your arma and quietly look on. Watch the turnin" of the 'thuaib screw' and calmly witneasthe tortures of the helpleaa victim. Speculate and theorize about the wrong and the right of the proceeding, tho necessity of excuse for such measures of oppression, persecution and barbar ous despotism. Acquiesce in tbe usurpations of our tyrants. Quietly submit to the overthrow of our Conatitutional government, for it is your bull and our ox. But do not expect to escape unscathed. History has demonstrated that the Union could not exist 'half free and half slave ' Time' will prove that it cannot remain half Republican and half despotism. Tho time ia not far distant when you will look upon the lawleaa and oppressive acta of a relentless tud cruel despotism with leas complacency ' XetvK of me XVcoSi. I Fortvone cases of school s!atc were recently shipped from Daniels ville, North ampton county, to Japan. Tho JJcmocrais oi t- unci tuumjr lected their candidate for Sheriff at tbe late election, ihe oniy one in eigmecu years. . air. JLfaviu way i it, luo.um wn London Grove, raised the past season a Monitor potato which measured nearly H inches in lenglh. Hoeenzweig, the notorious malpracti oner of New York city, was eentenccd to seven years' imorisonment, on Saturday, for having caused the death oi .ansa aucb liowlsby, of Patterson, N. J. Dan liice ia on another "farewell tour" throughout the State, with hi3 cir cus establishment. With the exception of John li. Gough, Dan is the greatest farewellist this country ever produced. Jacob Stoltz, a German, hung Lim self in the Alh gheny jail on Friday. lie had been impiisened for abusing bis wife, lie accomplished his destruction by the agency of a strap which be bad about bis body. J. D. Gill, ot JUeadvuic has attain ed a monstrosity in the vegetable line in the shape of a 17 pound beet the circum- r .,r la inTii fi.t-t fnur ntr-liPfl I Hie IsiawOru UtlllVKlTit ia icjjiui.huw iui this story. A family in New York, embracing three daughters and a son, will have a verv unusual occurrence take placo short ly. ' All the daughters and the son are to be married on the same day, and within the game boar, at the same piaco. Near Salem, N. II., a boy was gun ning. A woodchuck ran under a haymow; the boy fired at it, when the mow took fire and this was communicated to a barn. entirely consunieu. a tie wooucuuck es caped. Deputy Sheriff Irwin, who was con victed of taking il!egal fees from the Sher ilf's ofuce ir Philadelphia, and sentenced by Judge Paxson, October 21st, to pay a fine of fifty dollars, and undergo an im prisonment of two months, was pardoned j the Governor on Monday last. The gallant General Robert Ander son, of Fort Sumter fame, died at Nice, France, on Thursday last. In the bisto ry of our great war Anderson's name will always stand out prominently for his prompt and heroic defence of his country's flag at the first outbreak of hostilities. Brigham Young and his son, Joseph A. Young, have beun indicted for murder, in having ordered the killing of Richard Yates, and warrants for their arrest have been issued. Several other prominent Mormons are tobs arraingod on the charge TtVl of murder, and those, who can get away are speedily fleeing from the officers of the law. Eugene Lnmotr, a Frenchman and an emigrant on his way west committed suicide at Pittsburgh at an early hour on Monday morning last. He came from Baltimore and was en route to New Or leans, lie got cp early, went out on the railroad track and shot himself. He fell on tho track and a train passed over him, cutting off his legs. Mrs. Sarah Parker, tho wife of Thos. Parke-, living near fc?hawneetowr, was afHicted for some time, about two months ago, with frequent ppasms. Just as she was recovering from one of those tits, four snakes, some ten or fonrteen in ches long, crawled from her mouth, and sought a biding placo among the hiir her bead. These :be doctor secured, but a fifth one went back in her stomach. The woman lias since died. Ti e fire in Chicago swept through the German Cemetery, burning all the wooden head-boards, destroying all vaults, and burning all the dead bodies in their coffins. In the large receiving vault some twenty bodies were totally consumed. In some instances the fire burned a foot deep into tho ground. Some women were over taken in the Cemetery by tho rushing flame, and barely escaped by plungirg into the lake near by. Brigham Young is sail to have fled the country, or at least the Territory of Utah, in order to evade arrest upon an indictment for a murder committed some years ago. The action of the federal courts in finding Ilawkinf, the polygamic, guilty,"and sentencinghim to undergo an imprisonment of three years and pay a fine of five hundred dollars has caused terror in mormocdom, and will doubtless lead to the complete extirpation of the odi ous system. The Relief Society cf Chicago, in reply to numerous icquiries from per sons who cannot well send money, and wish to contribute articles, say that nolh. ing is now so needed as bean?, potatoes and onions. The Sanitary Society say the people must have these "articles if they are to escape eickncs3. Straw bed?, of thft usual size for two persons, aro also needed. The Relief Society are now feed ing 40,000 persons, and have few vege tables on hand and but little coining Tennmi-E Riot at Los Angells. San Francisco, Oct. 24. A terrible riot is go ing at Los 'Angeles." " A fight having oc curred in the . Chineso quarter, oTficer Bilderson attempted to arrest a Chinaman for shooting another. IIo was resisted, and he called on Robert Thompson, a cit izen, to assist him. The Chinese on both sides of the narrow street opened fire on both of theta. Mr. Thompson fell, shot through the breast, and died immediately. OlGcer Bilderson was shot through the shoulder, - but succeeded in gettfn" cn horseback and escaped. A MexicatTboy named Juan Jose Manderes, was also shot through the leg. A mob soon collected, and the greatest excitement prevailed They attacked tho whole Chinese quarter and wero resisted by the Chinese. Five hundred armed men surrounded tho Chi nese quarter to prevent any from escap ing. Fifteen Chinamen were banged by the mob and their bouses set on firo. Tho fire was, however, extinguished. A cable dispatch dated G I. M., says that order at Los Angeles has been par tially restored, and no more bloodshed has taken placo. Several Chinamen havo been arrested and are lodged in jail. . - Pexnsylvas! p lo All v rioM It Mv ( . . V lv. ing of the Executive Corr At , state fciibbaib School i-utiee of ih. ft: :. - ""'"-'On. ' ;. tbe following tnovecenja: 0 surest that ht !rs.,f r. . Sabbaths in November '' tu determined by Sunday school v .,!!;e.' ,0 U and pasters in e.ch locality '.";''- which to gather U.e,e colWt " n:t Jas t . Weir, E-q., of H.,;: of the llarti.-!,ui Nat:oiirl I'. Treasurer of this "Sunday SchoJiv s'k 1 o him the sums collect J niav te t','- .' drafts or pott-oflke orders. " Acktiow'eJgracnt will rJe aa.e of contributed by each school, by i:::n:S' '". in the o!T;t::-l documents of tLc a,i.' ' ' in some such other w.iy ns r.iay (e .'tt County seeictariei" of ore a: ";-c j pastors of the-chure!:?, mi cf 't.V- r rents, supeiintendeiits, teiohem, ::!'..: ' J school people, are htrr'-v ii vi-r.- r., I lend liicir active co o prat;ou is. tLt ..' tbi cill. We eh.-.ll not By r'8 worJ to c-.n,n , -1 eaupc. You know the need. VVe arc .-.'' that our Sunday schools will, to u e 1 ' f" spond. You may be a--sjrej of the h' in tte exercise at tiie tru.-t k--the benefactions be-toel wi:j si. tnbuted in ti.e most r.ccie i ue :5 t not forcetliiig, in the clain. ol" t!, ; the suffering that has enrcfj iT-,,r,r- towns awi villages oi i.ie j ur'. ; l ue I.OfCS lli:tl we CCT.'rc frchool children of our St,.toe not disappoint us in il is nu'.tcr. leap thlsi in ot.eof the pr.:i .'.-.5; ( for the exerv.-i.-e of a practical ':. tf. By order of the Ele ctive C t'LOLHE A . i'i : State Sucdiv h I. Ni E'litir Sun .Ktt. Philadelphia, October 17, 1 57 1 . Lcso FKver, common c 1, cittrn.j art! tiasal discharge -i a br - wLh v T-tro-c-tt in A m ri : a ' llctaii Clctbin- IIouo. 5 5 & y 9 y ' IN VALUABLE GIFTS! to u- disti. i i.i-: : 1 s 5 i.vjkI it roc las: ?ixijii.t s i H fc ti tj rj" fcsli kct Vis t;?3l I To be drawn Monday. N;v. iT. IsTI. Two Grand C;ijiltn'is of $5,000 each in Grehrb! Two Prizes $1,0005 $ -,rn Five Prizes $500 UMrWp"fi Ten Prizes $100 a I & WHOLE NUMBER CF CASH CFTS. '- 0':! One Fine-tone 1 Ro e.vi Pi ::no. w: ;r 5"! ' itrp Jifftvy i - i:ih 1! n nl !) lint I llarii ihtUt ChaSnx.in.rtli .V'.-'.'rt ) . .' Ti Zt.i s.sritizi Hzrfc? Ts-i':. - I " Tiiirs' z-:i.z ztjzSi 7rr:::. v.". fOO (job I a i I Siirt r Js-Tt r it . - trunk T (! J."i ' ' '- Ttiie?' Gold Le'ontitK- 'luiin. "": t'lmins. JM!ver-ilat'l ';-! r-. i '. r-.iv-r:. I.tiMe 1 late! Table n;. l l Handli-il IHnnor Knivc-. ! ! I ' Forks, Silv-r Vot i 'l'.aip.-. I i. ' - v " ' ' I.ali's' OioM IJreastpinsaixi I .r-i'.: '''' of ! I in- cr-ri'M's, ; Shirt St .v . . " I I IVh. oi r xvr- ' i- ;'S.z, 6.000. T::::: li:::: c: - AtiESTS UAMEI) to !! Ti Vtv :o w !wtn I.ibpral ir taiiii:is iii l--ifn- Sikgi.e Ticket? ?1; Six Ti ki i? f'.: T;r :.ve Tickets f !:; T-aemy-five Ti k;-'- Circular ?ontaininfr a tvV. ; ff ,"-3..-'; script it in of tho warmer of i!r.iw:.'. ' iufi.riaatioii in ref.'renc" t tii 1'. -:-',! ' will Le int to any on ! ! ir.-r l'-. i;-- -" tcrs must be addre;jel to OFF1CK. L. I. SIM.. V.o 101 l 5th St., -: - Is' i r o v e y o ui: siuur EY THE U": PARABOLA SPECMIB Mantifa tfirv r t Ui;C2. N. Y. LEMMON & MURRAY, Wholesale and llsUvl fc.:! ; J in DRUGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, FA.XCV --1XD TOILET AnV-'LlS. Books, Stationkky, Jrwi:i.:;Tt are appointed Acnts for the sa'.e ('- ''' CF-LEBllATEl) riXT.U'IX?- Persons wearing- G'.s"c. or tr.- thiu. will do wi ll to i-ail. in ' '' ''' ' antt-n t't suit the fijht " ' KO l'EDDLHi:. EM i'LuVKI'- keystone mmm KUBLEY, ADAMS & CO,, No. 5 BIAEEET Street, PITTSBURGH, PA., It A N C F A C T tf B F. K S 0 ' CARRIAGE AX1 TIKE r.Oi. i, PLOW AM) MACHINE lit'I.Tis . Norway caikiac;f. r 'J"1". BRIDGE AND MOOV iI- -SCREW HOOK iUSi'lf; , 3-H.3ra. WAGON 1!'XJ. GREAT WESTERN GUN WORKS. Itillos, Double and Sinl? K;,rrt Daniel Mclaughlin', -U! at-Lau Johnstown. IVu lliL '" 'i Exchunjre liuildinjr, (iip-smirs.) 11" 1 . tus Jon mill J,.H'iit streets. V. i!! nitemi u liiess connected with his t'ro!e-"- JOHN 1 LINTON, Aihnit- Johnstown, Pa. OiTiee in ';,"1,!r'"-' west corner of Main and r'lv.nk'"1 nd story oproroethit the scholar oVl .i schools of our State be cal'.ej UV . -r'-'-i ute to tho relief of the fufftrc V- o ,cov,;v in tbe West nnd North vreu ' U- -a We Shot (.'mi, Hcivlri K, l "U. Sport in Gomis. Killo llarn ls. I ; '' ..:. iuus Gnu Materials. Ae. oii'l t1'' " ' ..,,.:' Address J. H. JOHNSTON. .--;' iv.. n(.r,--. I?U Mnithiiel.l St reel. .'."''a'ilO-'-E N. H. Army GarlincsloJi u vers boug-ht or traded for. Entrance on J run"2!l" T S. OGDKN, JrsmcE ok tup 1uJ J Johnstown. Pa. Office on Iron : s' K T twpen th ronemai.-.'h ISridirc him ' ,i ie pot. -o kct ions nndali business iu" y. bun wili bo promptly attouded to. - EJ. WATERS, baa removed tho office rect-u 0f Pied by Dr. E. H. 1'lanfc- on e f1 Centre street, opposite Colorado io- V